GOVT 3596

GOVT 3596

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025.

This courses re-traces modern political thought through four concepts that characterize its emergence: nature, freedom, rights, and revolution. This course engages these concepts through texts across several genres, primarily those produced in the Italian city-states, Britain, France, and Germany. Beginning with Niccolò Machiavelli, we will first consider what exactly participants in "modernity" understood themselves to be doing. Next, alongside the works of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, we will explore how these ideas about modernity inflect their understanding of nature and ground their understandings of political freedom. Then, we will engage with these insights in tandem with conflicts over notions of the citizen as a rights-bearing figure in the years of the American and French Revolutions through the works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Thomas Paine, and Edmund Burke. We will conclude by examining the legacy of revolution in modern political thinking in the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Nietzsche.

When Offered Spring.

Distribution Category (SSC-AS)
Course Subfield (PT)

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Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session. 

  • 3 Credits Stdnt Opt

  • 19447 GOVT 3596   LEC 001

    • TR
    • Jan 21 - May 6, 2025
    • Chen, A

  • Instruction Mode: In Person